The invitation to attend a Tribunal hearing and its aftermath
10 On 19 December 2014 the Tribunal wrote to the appellant to advise that it had considered the available material but was unable to make a favourable decision on that information alone. Accordingly, he was invited to appear before the Tribunal to give evidence and present arguments relating to the issues arising in his case (see Migration Act, s 425). The hearing was fixed for 30 January 2015. That morning medical records from Cumberland Hospital were emailed to the Tribunal. They revealed the following information.
11 On 16 October 2014 the appellant was admitted to Cumberland Hospital, having been transferred from Westmead Hospital. He had been taken by his son to Westmead Hospital due to his mental state, which had declined over the previous few weeks. The appellant reported not sleeping well over that time, hearing voices in the Tamil language, intense at night, telling him that some people would kill him and his son. He said that he was very concerned about the safety of his wife and three other children who remained in Sri Lanka. He reported that his wife's brother was involved in the terrorist organisation, LTTE. He was diagnosed with an adjustment disorder, PTSD, and generalised anxiety disorder.
12 The hospital notes also indicated that he had had a previous admission to Logan Hospital (in Queensland) from 2 to 9 December 2013.
13 On 3 November 2014 the appellant was referred by his GP to a psychologist, suffering from depression and post-traumatic stress disorder ("PTSD").
14 The hearing took place as scheduled on 30 January 2015.
15 The appellant was questioned through an interpreter over a period of about an hour and a quarter. When asked whether he remembered what month and year the "army round up" took place, he said he did not. The Tribunal member reminded the appellant that the war ended in May 2009 and asked him whether he remembered roughly how long after it the army came to his home. He did not. He also said that he did not remember when his brother-in-law had died, why he had died, or how he had died.
16 At one point during the interrogation the member informed the appellant:
I just want to give you my understanding of your evidence today about the problems you had with the army once the war finished. Essentially there was one problem; you had gone to your brother-in-law's home, he died, you pay tribute, some photos were taken and when you got back home the army came and saw the photos. They said that because of the brother-in-law they suspected you were in the LTTE, they hit you and then they left. You then went into hiding and came to Australia. You did not know of any problem your son … had except that after this occasion when the army came to your home you sent him to Saudi Arabia so he would be safe. This is quite different from what you have said in your written statements. You made a written statement in November 2012, in this statement you say how after the war ended at a checkpoint the army beat you.
After that in 2010 you were helping the TNA, and then the army came and took your son … away to a camp, and you thought they had tortured him, but he wouldn't tell you what happened. But because of that, you arranged for him to go to Saudi Arabia. Then one week after he left the army came back again, and they said that you and [your son] were in the LTTE, and after that you stopped work and you stopped living at home and you did that until then you left Sri Lanka. Now, why didn't you tell me about all of those things today?
17 The appellant's response was:
I don't remember. My memory is not good.
18 The following exchange then took place:
TRIBUNAL: Well, is what you said in this written statement of November 2012 that I just read to you, is that correct?
APPELLANT: This is the problem. That's why.
TRIBUNAL: But is what I read to you from that statement, is it correct?
APPELLANT: This is the problem. This is the problem I have because of my brother-in-law and the photographs.
TRIBUNAL: But, you know, there's no mention in this written statement about these photographs.
APPELLANT: Yes, I didn't say that at the time because I had family issues. My family, they didn't stay at one place and they've been moving from here and there, so I couldn't concentrate and I didn't say that at the time.
TRIBUNAL: Now, you made two further written statements in December 2012, and in these statements you say that after 1995 the army suspected your family were in the LTTE because at that time your wife's brother … joined the LTTE, and you then talk about the army demanding your vehicle, and again taking away your son … Again that's all different from what you told me today. Do you wish to comment on that?
APPELLANT: My mind is not clear, you know. My brain can't working, you know. I told you this is the problem that I have (indistinct) there's nothing else I'd like to say.
TRIBUNAL: I also notice that, as I said to you before, in your first statement you say how in February 2010 you sent your son to Saudi Arabia, and one week later you went into hiding. In the statement you did in December 2012 you say something different. You talk about again that you sent your son to Saudi Arabia in February 2010, but you say that it is not until March 2012 that you go into hiding. You say that it was because at that time the army came with guns looking for you. So why did your two written statements give different dates as to when you went into hiding?
APPELLANT: This is the truth. I don't remember. I don't remember and I don't know what to say because I was slumming here and there to protect my life. I didn't think about, you know, saying everything in sequence and things like that so.
TRIBUNAL: In your first statement you say that in 1995 your wife's brother joined the LTTE, and for that reason then the army suspected your family of involvement with the LTTE, and you say that as a result your brother … was put into detention for two years from that time. In your later statement you say that in fact [your brother] was put in jail long before then in 1986. No why is that?
APPELLANT: I don't remember. My memory is not good. I'm worrying what I'm going to do and it's not good. It's true he was in jail, but I don't remember.
TRIBUNAL: In your written statements again you talk about how when your wife's brother joined the LTTE then the army thought the whole family were in the LTTE, and then you say how eventually your family got a letter from the LTTE saying that your wife's brother got killed, and that was a letter you said was written in 2001. ... Now, look, I find all of that very different from your account today, which was that the army started suspecting you of supporting the Tigers after you had gone to your wife's brother's home to see him, but found out he was dead, and some photos were taken. Do you wish to make any comment about that?
APPELLANT: This is the problem. I told you are ready I go back to my life by the army so I have already told you what my problem is, and that there is nothing to say. My brain is not working. I don't remember and I'm not having enough sleep so. That's much I can tell you (indistinct).
(Emphasis added.)
19 I will return to the answers and part answers emphasised above later in these reasons.
20 After the Tribunal member finished questioning the appellant, he turned to his migration agent and asked him whether he had anything to add. He told him that he had some submissions to make about the appellant's mental condition and "his inconsistency in his evidence". In fact, he made no submissions. Rather, he asked the Tribunal member how much weight he put on "the health documents". The member replied that he would take them into account. The migration agent then asked him whether he needed to "get more detail". The Tribunal member told him it was not for him to say but that if he wanted more time to do that, then he would give him that time.
21 Later, records relating to the earlier hospital admission in Queensland were furnished to the Tribunal. According to the hospital notes, the appellant had been brought in by ambulance and police who had been contacted by his housemates who felt threatened that he was sleeping with a knife under his pillow. Through a Tamil interpreter he stated that he could hear the voices of "the boys from the next room", saying that they wanted to bomb the place or shoot him. He was concerned that his housemates were practising a type of black magic on him, which gave him headaches or made him feel tired or weak. He stated that he kept a knife under his pillow for self-protection. He had become paranoid that his son was trying to poison him and had begun to eat separately. He also believed that people had threatened to kill or rape his wife. His son reported a deterioration in his father's mental state over five weeks, during which time he was talking to himself and gesturing in the mirror and had run away from home in the middle of the night. The son said his father's sleep had deteriorated over the past three weeks and his father had not eaten for the past three days. The notes included a past history of trauma in Sri Lankan: "tortured by the military". The diagnosis was of a psychotic disorder.
22 A summary of treatment he had received from a social worker/counsellor at the NSW Service for the Treatment and Rehabilitation of Torture and Trauma Survivors ("STARTTS"), dated 17 January 2015, and a report by a clinical psychologist from STARTTS dated 5 March 2015 were also submitted.
23 The psychologist conducted a mental state examination of the appellant on 27 February 2015. Amongst other things, the appellant reported experiencing ongoing worry and ruminating thoughts about being deported to Sri Lanka where he believed he would be imprisoned and killed, as he believed that fleeing the country would be perceived by the army as an admission of guilt. He also reported ruminating about never seeing his children again. He told the psychologist that when ruminating thoughts of this kind were triggered he suffered a number of symptoms including constant nervousness, heart palpitations and dizziness, difficulty breathing, body tension and shaking, restlessness, headaches, and experiences of panic (all of which, the psychologist noted, are symptoms associated with hyperarousal). He reported recurrent intrusive memories and vivid flashbacks of the trauma he said he had experienced, which exacerbated the symptoms of hyperarousal.
24 During the assessment, the psychologist made a number of significant behavioural observations. Relevantly, she wrote:
[W]hen [the appellant] spoke about experiencing beating and harassment in Sri Lanka he was fidgeting in the chair during the disclosure, his speech was rapid and at times he seemed to dissociate during disclosure. He also presented with signs of low mood and sadness particularly when he spoke about his family. At these times he was teary and he had to take small pauses and would sigh while speaking.
25 Later in the report, in the course of her discussion of the PTSD and anxiety-related symptoms, the psychologist noted:
Due to his preoccupation with rumination and re-collections (sic) of traumatic experiences and accompanied emotional distress, [the appellant] stated that he is often not present in reality and has difficulties recalling things, often having to be reminded of the conversations that took place or things that he did, indicating the presence of dissociation and dissociative states. This was also observed during the assessment session as [the appellant] struggle to recall details of his past and current experiences, his recollections were fragmented and not in chronological order, and at the point of escalated distress, he was experiencing dissociative reactions.
(Original emphasis.)
26 The psychologist diagnosed the appellant with PTSD and major depressive disorder. She recommended ongoing psychological treatment and supportive counselling and strongly recommended a full psychiatric assessment "with the aim of determining aspects of his dissociative states and presence of auditory hallucinations as well as the review of the psychopharmacological management of his symptomatology" and ongoing psychiatric monitoring to evaluate and manage his suicide ideations. If any such assessment took place, the results were not proffered to the Tribunal.
27 Notably, the psychologist said that "memory deficits and fragmented recollections, dissociation as well as avoidance of triggers of the trauma and irritability, are … clinical features associated with PTSD". She also wrote that the appellant was unable to explain the reasons for his earlier hospitalisation "due to memory impairment".
28 No submissions were made to the Tribunal as to the significance of this material or the extent to which, if at all, it could or did explain the inconsistencies in the appellant's accounts.